Volume 54 - Article 7 | Pages 177–214  

Learning and reproductive health: Do early cognitive skills contribute to better sexual and reproductive health outcomes among adolescents in Ethiopia?

By Fatima Zahra, Erica Soler-Hampejsek , Nicole Haberland

References

Abajobir, A.A. and Seme, A. (2014). Reproductive health knowledge and services utilization among rural adolescents in east Gojjam zone, Ethiopia: A community-based cross-sectional study. BMC Health Services Research 14(1): 1–11.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Argaw, B.A. (2013). The effect of female education on health knowledge and fertility behavior: Evidence from primary schooling reform in Ethiopia. international: IHSN, International Household Survey Network working paper.

Bank, World (2019). Ethiopia - Learning poverty brief – 2019. Washington, D.C: World Bank Group, Learning Poverty Brief 166350.

Barnett, I., Ariana, P., Petrou, S., Penny, M.E., Duc, L.T., Galab, S., and Boyden, J. (2013). Cohort profile: The Young Lives study. International Journal of Epidemiology 42(3): 701–708.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Bau, N., Das, J., and Chang, A.Y. (2021). New evidence on learning trajectories in a low-income setting. International Journal of Educational Development 84: 102430.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Behrman, J.A. (2015). Does schooling affect women’s desired fertility? Evidence from Malawi, Uganda, and Ethiopia. Demography 52(3): 787–809.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Bongaarts, J. and Casterline, J. (2013). Fertility transition: Is sub-Saharan Africa different? Population and Development Review 38(Suppl 1): 153.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Briones, K. (2017). How many rooms are there in your house? Constructing the young lives wealth index. Oxford: Young Lives study, Young Lives Technical Note 43.

Central Statistical Agency (CSA) [Ethiopia] and ICF (2016). Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey 2016. Addis Ababa and Rockville, MD: CSA and ICF.

Download reference:

Chicoine, L. (2016). Free primary education, schooling, and fertility: Evidence from Ethiopia. Bonn: IZA, IZA Discussion Papers.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Chuta, N., Birhanu, K., and Vinci, V. (2021). Who decides? Fertility and childbearing experiences of young married couples in Ethiopia.

Download reference:

Cleland, J., Machiyama, K., and Casterline, J.B. (2020). Fertility preferences and subsequent childbearing in Africa and Asia: A synthesis of evidence from longitudinal studies in 28 populations. Population Studies 74(1): 1–21.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Cunha, F., Heckman, J.J., Lochner, L., and Masterov, D.V. (2006). Interpreting the evidence on life cycle skill formation. In: Handbook of the economics of education. Amsterdam: Elsevier: 697–812.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Duc, L.Thuc, Penny, M., Boyden, J., Woldehanna, T., Galab, S., and Sanchez, A. (2022). Young Lives: An international study of childhood poverty: Round 4, 2013–2014 [electronic resource]. UK: UK Data Service.

Weblink:
UK Data Service. SN: 7931.
doi:10.5255/UKDA-SN-7931-3
Download reference:

Duflo, E., Dupas, P., and Kremer, M. (2015). Education, HIV, and early fertility: Experimental evidence from Kenya. American Economic Review 105(9): 2757–2797.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Duflo, E., Dupas, P., and Kremer, M. (2021). The impact of free secondary education: Experimental evidence from Ghana. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Gove, A., Brunette, T., Bulat, J., Carrol, B., Henny, C., Macon, W., and Sitabkhan, Y. (2017). Assessing the impact of early learning programs in Africa. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development 158: 25–41.

Weblink:
Download reference:

GPE (2020). Ethiopia: A long-term commitment to education spurs results. Washington, D.C.

Grépin, K.A. and Bharadwaj, P. (2015). Maternal education and child mortality in Zimbabwe. Journal of Health Economics 44: 97–117.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hayford, S.R. (2009). The evolution of fertility expectations over the life course. Demography 46(4): 765–783.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hoddinott, J., Iyer, P., Sabates, R., and Woldehanna, T. (2019). Evaluating large-scale education reforms in Ethiopia. Oxford: RISE, RISE Working Paper 19/034.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Jejeebhoy, S.J. (1995). Women’s education, autonomy, and reproductive behaviour: Experience from developing countries. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Joshi, R. and Verspoor, A. (2012). Secondary education in Ethiopia: Supporting growth and transformation. Washington, DC: World Bank Publications.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kaffenberger, M. (2019). A typology of learning profiles: Tools for analysing the dynamics of learning. Oxford: RISE, RISE Insight Series 15.

Download reference:

Kaffenberger, M., Pritchett, L., and Viarengo, M. (2021). Towards a right to learn: Concepts and measurement of global education poverty. In: Research handbook on measuring poverty and deprivation. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing: 212–223.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Keats, A. (2018). Women’s schooling, fertility, and child health outcomes: Evidence from Uganda’s free primary education program. Journal of Development Economics 135: 142–159.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kebede, E., Striessnig, E., and Goujon, A. (2022). The relative importance of women’s education on fertility desires in sub-Saharan Africa: A multilevel analysis. Population Studies 76(1): 137–156.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Le Mat, M.L., Miedema, E.A., Amentie, S.A., and Kosar-Altinyelken, H. (2021). Moulding the teacher: Factors shaping teacher enactment of comprehensive sexuality education policy in Ethiopia. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education 51(6): 862–880.

Weblink:
Download reference:

LeVine, R.A., LeVine, S., Schnell-Anzola, B., Rowe, M.L., and Dexter, E. (2011). Literacy and mothering: How women’s schooling changes the lives of the world’s children. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Litkowski, E.C., Duncan, R.J., Logan, J.A., and Purpura, D.J. (2020). When do preschoolers learn specific mathematics skills? Mapping the development of early numeracy knowledge. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 195: 104846.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Lloyd, C.B. and Mensch, B. (1999). Implications of formal schooling for girls’ transitions to adulthood in developing countries. In: National Research Council (ed.). Critical perspectives on schooling and fertility in the developing world. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press: 80–104.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Mare, R.D. and Maralani, V. (2006). The intergenerational effects of changes in women’s educational attainments. American Sociological Review 71(4): 542–564.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Mensch, B.S., Chuang, E.K., Melnikas, A.J., and Psaki, S.R. (2019). Evidence for causal links between education and maternal and child health: Systematic review. Tropical Medicine and International Health 24(5): 504–522.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Mezmur, H., Assefa, N., and Alemayehu, T. (2021). Teenage pregnancy and its associated factors in eastern Ethiopia: A community-based study. International Journal of Women’s Health 13: 267.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Mocan, N.H. and Cannonier, C. (2012). Empowering women through education: Evidence from Sierra Leone. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER working paper w18016).

Weblink:
Download reference:

Pritchett, L. (2013). The rebirth of education: Schooling ain’t learning. Washington D.C: Center for Global Development.

Download reference:

Psaki, S.R., Chuang, E.K., Melnikas, A.J., Wilson, D.B., and Mensch, B.S. (2019). Causal effects of education on sexual and reproductive health in low and middle-income countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis. SSM-Population Health 8: 100386.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Psaki, S.R., McCarthy, K.J., and Mensch, B.S. (2018). Measuring gender equality in education: Lessons from trends in 43 countries. Population and Development Review 44(1): 117–142.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Purpura, D.J., Hume, L.E., Sims, D.M., and Lonigan, C.J. (2011). Early literacy and early numeracy: The value of including early literacy skills in the prediction of numeracy development. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 110(4): 647–658.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Reed, H., Briere, R., and Casterline, J. (1999). The role of diffusion processes in fertility change in developing countries. Washington, D.C.: National Research Council.

Download reference:

Rolleston, C. (2014). Learning profiles and the “Skills Gap”: A comparative analysis of schooling and skills development in four developing countries. Oxford Review of Education 40(1): 132–150.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Sanchez, A., Woldehanna, T., Duc, L.Thuc, Boyden, J., Penny, M., and Galab, S. (2022). Young Lives: An international study of childhood poverty: Round 5, 2016.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Schnell-Anzola, B., Rowe, M.L., and LeVine, R.A. (2005). Literacy as a pathway between schooling and health-related communication skills: A study of Venezuelan mothers. International Journal of Educational Development 25(1): 19–37.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Sennott, C. and Yeatman, S. (2012). Stability and change in fertility preferences among young women in Malawi. International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 38(1): 34.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Shapiro, D. and Tenikue, M. (2017). Women’s education, infant and child mortality, and fertility decline in urban and rural sub-Saharan Africa. Demographic Research 37(21): 669–708.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Short, S.E. and Kiros, G.E. (2002). Husbands, wives, sons, and daughters: Fertility preferences and the demand for contraception in Ethiopia. Population Research and Policy Review 21(5): 377–402.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Singh, A. and Krutikova, S. (2017). Starting together, growing apart: Gender gaps in learning from preschool to adulthood in four developing countries. Oxford: Young Lives, Young Lives working papers 174.

Download reference:

Smith-Greenaway, E. (2013). Maternal reading skills and child mortality in Nigeria: A reassessment of why education matters. Demography 50(5): 1551–1561.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Soler-Hampejsek, E., Mensch, B.S., Psaki, S.R., Grant, M.J., Kelly, C.A., and Hewett, P.C. (2018). Reading and numeracy skills after school leaving in southern Malawi: A longitudinal analysis. International Journal of Educational Development 59: 86–99.

Weblink:
Download reference:

UNESCO (2024). Ethiopia: Education country brief. Paris: UNESCO.

Weblink:
Download reference:

UNFPA (2025). Ethiopia population 2025. New York City: United Nations Population Fund.

Yeatman, S., Trinitapoli, J., and Garver, S. (2020). The enduring case for fertility desires. Demography 57(6): 2047–2056.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Zahra, F. (2020). High hopes, low dropout: Gender differences in aspirations for education and marriage, and educational outcomes in rural Malawi. Comparative Education Review 64(4): 670–702.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Zahra, F., Haberland, N., and Psaki, S. (2022). PROTOCOL: Causal mechanisms linking education with fertility, HIV, and child mortality: A systematic review. Campbell Systematic Reviews 18(2): e1250.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Back to the article